Business Standard

EXPORTS DIP 0.66% IN MARCH TO $29.11 BN

Trade deficit widens to $13.69 billion from $11.98 billion in February

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Exports fell for the first time in four months in March due to contractio­n in the major exchange earning goods such as refinery products, gems & jewellery, and textiles. Exports dipped by 0.66 per cent to $29.11 billion in March, even as they increased by 9.78 per cent for 2017-18. Exports aggregated at $302.84 billion in 2017-18 compared to $275.85 billion in the previous fiscal year. Imports in March grew by 7.15 per cent to $42.8 billion, leaving a trade deficit of $13.69 billion, according to data released by the commerce ministry on Friday. Oil imports during the month under review were valued at $11.11 billion, 13.92 per cent higher than the previous year. During 2017-18, imports increased by 19.59 per cent to $459.67 billion.

Exports fell in March due to a contractio­n in refinery products, gems and jewellery and textiles, but managed to cross the $300-billion target for the first time in two years in 2017-18. A decline in the growth rate for three straight months till February led to a 0.66 per cent fall in exports in March. The growth rate had slipped to 4.48 per cent in February, down from 30.5 per cent in November.

According to data released by the commerce and industry ministry on Friday, exports stood at $29.11 billion in March, taking the total tally in 2017-18 to $302.84 billion, marginally above the government’s target of $300 billion. In 2016-17, exports stood at $275.85 billion. India’s annual exports remained above the $300-billion mark till 2014-15, but declined to $262.29 billion in 2015-16 due to a global slowdown.

Imports grew 7.15 per cent in March to $42.80 billion, against 10.4 per cent growth in February. During 2017-18, imports increased 19.59 per cent to $459.67 billion.

The trade deficit came in at $13.69 billion in March, higher than $11.98 billion in February. For the full financial year, the deficit stood at $156.83 billion, up from $108.50 billion in 2016-17, mainly due to a rise in oil import bill.

Of the 30 major product groups, 18 recorded growth in March, the same number as in February. However, a sizeable chunk of major export segments continued to see a contractio­n in March. These include the volatile refinery products segment, which contracted 13.22 per cent after a 27.44 per cent rise in February.

Readymade garments, the sector in which India's export competitiv­eness has steadily fallen over the past financial year, also continued its downward slide. In March, the sector exported $1.49 billion worth of merchandis­e, a 17.78 per cent fall from a year ago.

The gems and jewellery sector also witnessed a 16.57 per cent decline in shipments in March, up from the 5.14 per cent contractio­n seen in February. “The pace of exports of gems and jewellery would take a cue from demand as well as the availabili­ty of funding for this sector in the aftermath of the fraud reported by Punjab national Bank (PNB). Lower exports would dampen imports of gold and pearls, precious, and semi-precious stones,” said Aditi Nayar, principal economist at Icra.

Engineerin­g goods exports, on the other hand, rose 2.62 per cent to $8.11 billion after a 1.88 per cent fall in February. Other segments that posted growth include pharmaceut­icals (up 8.40 per cent) and organic and inorganic chemicals (up 31.75 per cent).

“A dip in the volume of gold imports in March more than offset the price rise in the interim period, contributi­ng to the 40 per cent year-on-year contractio­n in the value of gold imports. However, the decline was largely offset by the pickup in crude oil imports during the month,” Nayar said.

In March, the country imported $11.10 billion worth of crude oil, a 13.92 per cent rise, compared to 32.05 per cent in the previous month. This took the cumulative import bill for 2017-18 to over $459 billion, from $384 billion in 2016-17.

Non-oil, non-gold imports, a sign of domestic industrial demand, rose 12.2 per cent in March, after a 7.28 per cent decline in February.

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